RBI Grade B Phase 2 exam still has 11 days (scheduled for 6th Dec 2025) to either revise smartly or in a scattered or smart way. And the smart way always gives good or even amazing outcomes. The next 10 days are not about reading everything you find, nor about experimenting with new content, but about revising the core, practicing deliberately, and training your mind to perform under exam conditions. This 10-Day Mock Test Challenge is crafted for aspirants who want to complete the Phase 2 syllabus, sharpen their skills, and boost exam-day confidence without getting exhausted. Read on to follow it with discipline, and skyrocket your marks in these last 10 days, especially in ESI, FM, and English Descriptive.
This 10-day revision plan is crafted to help you revisit the most important themes, strengthen conceptual clarity, and apply knowledge under realistic exam pressure. Each day is a combination of focused revision, one specific mock test, and deliberate reinforcement.
This challenge doesn’t overload you. Instead, it will give you a structured rhythm, encompassing daily revision, one targeted mock test, and one practice drill. And they’ll combine to give you the consistency your revision requires.
Let’s look at how this preparation strategy works across 10 days:
| Day | Focus Area of Attention | What to Revise (Most Important) | Mock Test |
| 1 | ESI Revision Block 1 | Monetary Policy, Fiscal Policy, Growth & Development | ESI Mock (Difficulty: Moderate) |
| 2 | FM Revision Block 1 | RBI Functions, Financial System, Risk Management | F&M Mock (Moderate) |
| 3 | English Descriptive | Essay (Economy + Social Themes) | 1 Essay Mock |
| 4 | ESI Revision Block 2 | Economic Survey Themes + Social Sector Schemes | ESI Mock (High Difficulty) |
| 5 | FM Revision Block 2 | Financial Markets, Basel Norms, Derivatives | FM Mock (High Difficulty) |
| 6 | English Descriptive | Precis + RC | Precis & RC Mock |
| 7 | Integrated Revision | ESI + FM (Top 20 Themes Combined) | Half-Length Combined Mock |
| 8 | Full-Length Simulation | Essay + ESI + FM Writing Flow | Full-Length Mock |
| 9 | Weak Area Repair | Revise only mistakes from all mocks | Sectional Retry Drills |
| 10 | Final Conditioning | Writing Templates + CA Reinforcement | Final Mini-Mock (90 mins) |
This challenge is built for consistency, not for cramming. You revise the most important material, attempt realistic mocks, analyse immediately, and repair weak areas the same day. This rhythm ensures that when you walk into the exam hall, your mind is trained, steady, and exam-ready.
These tips are not standard advice. They are short, smart, sharply practical techniques that most competitors don’t use. They fit directly into the 10-day plan and align with the needs of the final-lap revision.
Instead of revising chapter by chapter, revise backwards from your mistakes.
Step-by-step:
This method saves hours because you revise only what the exam actually tests you on, not the entire syllabus again.
In the last 10 days, detailed notes haven’t helped. A 2-page compressed sheet works like magic.
Your sheet should include:
Spend 10 minutes reading this sheet every morning and night. This strengthens recall and gives you conceptual sharpness without overloading.
Micro-revision drills are very short revision exercises that take only 5 minutes each. They help you revise important points quickly without getting tired or bored. You can do 2–3 drills in a day, and together they will improve your memory and confidence.
Here are some examples:
These small drills save time, refresh your memory, and increase your accuracy without any pressure.
Instead of writing long essays daily, use this strategy:
Mode 1 (5 minutes): Write only the first paragraph of an essay
Mode 2 (5 minutes): Write only the last paragraph of a precis or RC summary
Why? Because the intro and conclusion carry the highest marks, and they shape the entire piece. When these become strong, your overall score automatically rises—even with average body paragraphs.
Most aspirants waste hours reattempting everything.
You don’t need to.
In the last 10 days, you must reattempt only:
These “almost correct” questions improve your score instantly.
They raise accuracy faster than revising full chapters.
Instead of revising single topics one by one, revise themes—because themes help you understand how concepts are connected. This is exactly how questions are asked in Phase 2.
A Theme Revision Loop means you revise 3 to 4 connected concepts together.
Here is a clear table that shows it best :
| 15-Minute Theme Revision Loops (ESI & FM) | ||
| Revision cycle | Full Forms Included | What to Revise |
| -Inflation -Monetary Policy -Economic Growth -RBI Role | Monetary Policy (MP), Reserve Bank of India (RBI) | How inflation connects to policy decisions and growth. |
| -NPAs -PCA -Capital Adequacy -Basel Norms | Non-Performing Assets (NPAs), Prompt Corrective Action (PCA) | How bad loans affect bank stability and global norms. |
| -Social Schemes -Education -Health -Demographic Trends | – | How welfare schemes link with human development. |
| -Financial Markets -Regulation -Inclusion -Digital Payments | — | How finance, rules, and technology work together. |
| -Fiscal Deficit -Government Spending -Public Debt -FRBM Act | Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) Act | How government finances impact the economy. |
Set a timer for 15 minutes and revise one revision cycle. This builds interconnected understanding—exactly what Phase 2 questions demand.
Heavy mocks drain mental stamina. So, use one light simulation every night:
This takes 15 to 20 minutes and conditions your brain to stay exam-ready without burnout.
This technique is extremely effective and drastically underused.
Record a 60-second audio summary of:
Play them twice a day.
Listening activates a different memory pathway and ensures your concepts stay fresh on exam day.
Before every mock, repeat these three lines:
1. Read carefully.
2. Don’t jump to conclusions.
3. Maintain the writing structure.
This calms the mind and reduces silly errors.
Use it every day for these 10 days.
The final day is not for revision. It’s for clarity. So, you need to do only three things:
That’s all. A calm mind scores more than an over-revised mind.
It is a structured plan of daily revision, one mock test, and practice drills to boost exam confidence.
It avoids cramming and focuses on smart revision, mistake repair, and exam‑style practice for better scores.
The plan covers ESI (Economic & Social Issues), FM (Finance & Management), and English Descriptive.
It means revising backwards from your mistakes in mock tests, so you save time and focus on weak areas.
Keep it light and read the 2‑page concept sheet, review writing templates, and revise 3 policy summaries only.
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